Scientists predict increasing flooding for U.S. coastal communities along the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts due to rising sea levels. A new study indicates that by 2050, coastal cities will experience more flooding, with San Francisco's Superfund site at risk of toxic waste resurfacing. Some coastal U.S. cities, like Atlantic City, are sinking and facing higher flood risks.
Atlantic City is one of the most flood-vulnerable coastal cities in the U.S., a new study shows. via @zoeread88 https://t.co/7PPbzmvVMc
Map shows which coastal U.S. cities are sinking, face greater flood risk https://t.co/YsC3EK6e7p
Potentially toxic waste could surface at a San Francisco Superfund site in just over a decade, partly because of human-caused climate change. https://t.co/dbGxvIExFJ
U.S. citizens living in coastal cities should expect to see more flooding due to rising sea levels by 2050, according to a new study. | By @BottRivera https://t.co/pSSI9oVIQx
Those living along the coasts in the U.S. — Atlantic, Pacific, and the Gulf — are no strangers to flooding. Scientists have long been predicting flooding will only become more common for coastal communities. https://t.co/AWBj6TIIXr https://t.co/lt395kzqnt